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Air Quality Monitoring & Assessment

What are those white lines in the sky?

Revised On: Oct. 10th, 2025 - 01:45 pm

If you’ve ever seen a jet airplane fly across the sky, you may have noticed that there is sometimes a thin white line behind it. This white line is called a contrail cloud, short for condensation trail.

Water vapor is one of the byproducts of jet fuel combustion and will turn into ice crystals in the cold air at the high altitudes where jet airplanes fly. Those ice crystals create a cloud (the contrail), which is normal and does not pose any public health risk.   

Contrails can evaporate quickly if humidity is low, or they can linger, and even grow by taking in water from the surrounding atmosphere, when humidity is high.

These contrails may appear to be grid-shaped, which is due to flight patterns generally following routes or corridors established by the National Airspace System (NAS). Just as there are highways for vehicles crisscrossing the United States, there are similar corridors in the sky most air travel follows.

You may sometimes hear contrails mistakenly called chemtrails. Occasionally, ADEQ is contacted by members of the public who wonder if the contrails they see might contain harmful chemicals or metals. While ADEQ does not collect data directly from contrails, our comprehensive regulatory monitoring and sampling of ambient air, water, and soil quality show no evidence of harmful chemicals being released from aircraft. 

Aircraft emissions are regulated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Section 231 of the Clean Air Act (CAA) directs the EPA to establish aircraft engine emissions standards for any air pollutant that could reasonably be anticipated to endanger public health or welfare. The CAA further dictates in Section 232 that the federal Department of Transportation (DOT) is responsible for enforcing the standards established by EPA. DOT has delegated this enforcement responsibility to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). The FAA ensures compliance with these regulations by reviewing and approving certification test plans, procedures, test reports and engine emissions certification levels.

For a more in-depth look, see EPA’s online resource | View Contrails Page >

For Contrail Concerns:

Ph: 602-771-2288

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For Air Quality Inquiries:

Ph: 602-771-2275

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